Behind the GATE experiment : evidence on effects of and rationales for subsidized entrepreneurship training
Robert W. Fairlie; Dean Karlan; Jonathan Zinman
Theories of market failures and targeting motivate the promotion of entrepreneurship training programs and generate testable predictions regarding heterogeneous treatment effects from such programs. Using a large randomized evaluation in the United States, we find no strong or lasting effects on those most likely to face credit or human capital constraints, or labor market discrimination. We do find a short-run effect on business ownership for those unemployed at baseline, but this dissipates at longer horizons. Treatment effects on the full sample are also short-term and limited in scope: we do not find effects on business sales, earnings, or employees.
Year of publication: |
2014
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Authors: | Fairlie, Robert W. ; Karlan, Dean ; Zinman, Jonathan |
Publisher: |
München : CESifo |
Subject: | entrepreneurship | training | random experiment | evaluation | self-employment | Arbeitsmarktpolitik | Labour market policy | Unternehmer | Entrepreneurs | Qualifikation | Occupational qualification | Betriebliches Bildungsmanagement | Employer-provided training | Subvention | Subsidy | Unternehmensgründung | Business start-up | Beschäftigungseffekt | Employment effect | USA | United States |
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